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Colinversiones Gets CAF Cash

Colombian holding company Colinversiones has secured $65m in long-term funds from CAF to upgrade its Termoflores power generation plant. The company will boost capacity of the plant to 610MW from 441MW, CAF says. Colinversiones recently told LatinFinance it was negotiating a $130m 12-year loan with CAF and the IFC. The company recently funded itself with a $300m bridge from Bancolombia, but securing long-term financing to support investment is part of the investment plan. Colinversiones has interests in the energy, financial and other sectors.

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Colinversiones Preps Multilateral Credit

Colinversiones, the Colombian firm with interests in the energy, financial and other sectors, is negotiating a $130m 12-year loan with CAF and the IFC. The credit should be finalized this month or next, president Juan Guillermo Londono tells LatinFinance, declining to speculate on price. The company recently funded itself with a $300m bridge from Bancolombia, but securing long-term financing to support investment is part of the investment plan. Londono says multilateral rates are more attractive. Colombia’s Empresas Publicas de Medellin recently secured a $450m IDB facility at just 20bp over Libor on a 25-year term, with a 6-year grace period. Colinversiones is looking to fund expansion in the electricity generation sector, a focus that will see it divest holdings in non-core areas over the long term. “In the energy sector, there are favorable conditions for the entrance of new players,” says Londono. He adds that it is a diverse cash generating sector driven by an imbalance – about 1.8x – between demand for electric power and supply. “We are expanding first our current plants, and second designing and building new projects, as well as continuing to expand through acquisitions, including some international expansion in the medium-term,” says the official. Although there is interest, Londono says there are no immediate plans to tap Colombia’s liquid domestic bond market.

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IDB, BNDES Ready Jumbo Rail RFP

The IDB and the BNDES are within months of issuing an RFP seeking financing proposals for a $9bn Brazil project, say executives involved in the process. The venture to construct a high-speed train between Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro has gained traction, despite a challenging financing environment and apparently no specific allocation for the project within the federal government’s national infrastructure plan. The most recent version of the rail plan is understood to have been set in motion by Italian engineering and infrastructure shop Italplan. Several global shops including Allstom, Mitsubishi, Siemens and Bombardier, are heard to have expressed interest in the concession. While a large portion of the financing is likely to come from the IDB, BNDES and likely other multilaterals, as well as ECAs, executives involved believe commercial banks will have to provide a significant chunk of the funding. The IDB and BNDES have hired Shearman & Sterling for legal counsel on the project.

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CAF Places COP Bonds

CAF has sold COP240bn ($95m) in fixed-rate bonds on Colombia’s domestic market. The multilateral priced COP112bn in 2014 bonds at 9.60% and COP128bn in 2019s at 10.79%. Total demand exceeded COP300bn, according to bookrunners. The deal is CAF’s third placement in Colombia, and follows a COP240bn sale in December. BBVA managed the sale. CAF is rated A1 on a global scale. The Colombian debt market – LatAm’s most active local forum this year – awaits a COP200bn placement from power grid operator ISA today. The issue in 2 tranches worth some $80m with 6 and 9 year maturities, could grow to $100m equivalent and marks ISA’s first local tap since December. Correval, Citi and Bancolombia are leading that transaction.

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Cabei to Press on with Local Currency Taps

The Central American Bank for Economic Integration (Cabei) plans to continue issuance in Taiwan, Costa Rica and Colombia as it meets 2009 funding needs of $500m. No decisions have been made, but Treasurer Jose Felix Magana tells LatinFinance the placements so far this year — $20m in Costa Rica, $107m in Colombia and $190m in Taiwan – have gone better than expected. “There was demand left behind, and we could execute in one or all of those markets again this year,” the official says. Magana adds there could also be more Honduras placement, after $5.5m last year, and the bank is evaluating a previously untapped market in both Asia and Latin America. “We’re trying to use our good credit to educate [issuers] about longer tenors and different types of products,” he says, noting that this is not limited to bonds. Cabei plans a $100m regional commercial paper program, with tenors of 30-360 days in new markets, for this year. It will also replace an existing CP program for US and European issuance with a $500m program by the end of April. Magana says Cabei has no need to place dollar bonds, though it does not rule out the possibility. The bank estimates it will lend $1.3bn this year, versus $1.6bn in 2008.

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Multilateral Support Vital: IDB

Multilateral support will be vital for LatAm, particularly if access to credit market remains constrained for several years, a study conducted by the IDB shows. “The region’s 7 biggest economies need to finance $400bn of maturing public debt in the next 2 years and may potentially need another $200bn to finance their growing budget deficits,” the IDB says. The study recommends the multilateral system should help countries achieve sustainable fiscal positions gradually while protecting social programs and enhancing productivity. In addition, it says multilateral institutions should shift their policies towards long-term financing from short-term emergency lending.

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BBVA Peru Tees Up Issuance

Peru’s BBVA Banco Continental is looking to raise $250m in capital markets through the rest of 2009, including syndicated loans, a diversified payment rights (DPR) issue, local markets and a probable $150m 30NC10 hybrid. Local markets are currently most attractive, BBVA Banco Continental assistant general manager Luis Ignacio De la Luz Davalos tells LatinFinance. In soles, Davalos says BBVA can source up to $50m by issuing tranches with an average tenor of 7 years. “We are looking at ways of using the DPR . . . we still have room for more,” says the banker. BBVA Continental issued last year a $250m 2016 bond, its first DPR offer from a new program. The notes rated A by Fitch were placed privately. “Right now the market is closed,” says Davalos, speaking of DPRs. Bankers in Medellin over the weekend were heard actively pitching DPRs to clients. The structure has made a comeback since plain vanilla markets shut down. After Basel II regulations are introduced in July, BBVA is also looking to put together a hybrid capital 30NC10 issue that steps up after year 10. Such deals are typically sold to Asia. Davalos says the recent sovereign issue from Peru helps set a cross-border benchmark out for his institution to follow. He declines to state which bank BBVA is working with. The banker adds that retail banking is slowing down in Peru, though not dramatically.

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Committee Tips Major IDB Funds Boost

A special commission recommended Sunday to the IDB that it lift funding to $230bn-$280bn from $100bn. The commission’s head, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, called an IDB capital increase the central subject of this year’s annual meetings of the multilateral. “The urgency is that the possible alternatives, such as selling loans or guaranteeing the capital of some Latin American countries, all have downsides,” says Kuczynski, a former Peruvian finance minister. He adds that the proposed increase is not that large in relative terms. The committee’s recommendation starts the discussion, but the process is a “diplomatic dance” made more challenging by constraints on some donor countries facing slower growth and lower reserves. Kuczynski warns that the IDB will run up against limits this year, and the process to reach approval for such a capital raise could take as long as 2 years. The paid-in portion of the amount would be subject to negotiation, but if kept at current levels it would mean about $7bn, including about $2bn from the US. Kuczynski warns that alternative measures like selling loans to raise funds could be more costly in the long run. “The commission found that we should avoid financial engineering, not just because it’s the most discredited profession nowadays, but because we need to keep the AAA rating using a minimum amount of cash,” he says. The IDB has frontloaded available lending capacity and this year plans to approve up to $18bn, versus $11bn in 2008, up sharply from a 10-year trailing average of $5bn-$6bn, according to COO Dan Zelikow. “At this stage, we’re just asking for guidance. We’re not asking [shareholders] for a specific number, we haven’t recommended any particular number,” Zelikow tells LatinFinance, speaking of the capital increase.

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